Module 5 - Baber Makayla

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Module 5

CRITICAL THINKING ASSIGNMENT (60 points)

Choose one of the following two assignments to complete this week. Do not do both assignments. Identify your assignment choice in the title of your submission. When you are ready to submit, click the Module 5 Critical Thinking header on the Assignments page to upload the document.

Assignment Choice #1: Case 8.2 Customer-Driven HR Costs and Benefits: Assessing the Business Case for Training

Read Case 8.2 in Managing Human Resources. After reading the case, please complete the following items:

 Write a summary of the case,

 Answer the critical thinking questions, and

 Elaborate on two key learnings from the case related to training and development and its integration with the organization. Be sure to clearly state the two key learnings and defend them in well-organized, scholarly responses.

A key learning is defined as significant knowledge gained from reading the case. You may choose to explain your key learnings by offering a real-world application, personal insight, your thoughts and opinions about what was stated, how it is handled at your company, etc.

Please arrange your summary, questions, and key learnings in a well-organized, scholarly response of 2- 3 pages. Support your observations and opinions with citations from 2-3 credible sources documented according to the to Writing and APA Requirements.

Assignment Choice #2: Training and Development in the Organization

Based on what you learned through the assigned readings and course content, you will create a model (in a PowerPoint slide) that visually depicts training and development in terms of how training and development should be integrated within an organization. A “model” is an illustration of your theory of training and development—based on your thoughts, experiences, perspective, and opinion.

For an example of a training and development model, check out the Learning Transfer model created by Ford and Weissbein, which is part of your assigned reading for this module.

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Please arrange your model in a PowerPoint slide or slides. Refer to the Module 1 Critical Thinking assignment for best practices in PowerPoint design. Support your design with citations from 2-3 credible sources documented according to the to Writing and APA Requirements.

280 PART IV • EMPLOYEE DEVELOPMENT

Case 8.2 Customer-Driven HR Costs and Benefits: Assessing the Business Case for Training

No matter what your business, to stay in business you have to attract and retain customers. How do you do that? One way is to deliver a quality product or service in a high-quality way. In other words, it is a combination of what is offered and how it is offered that determines if a buyer will become a loyal customer. Training is one way to make sure that employees’ technical skills and customer-service skills meet customer expectations.

When making a business decision, two basic elements are typically considered: costs and benefits. In the case of training, the  issues are: (1) how much does the training reduce costs? and (2) how much does the training increase revenue? If the training sufficiently reduces costs and/or increases revenues, there is a strong business case to conduct the training. Your ability to iden- tify the potential sources of revenue and costs and to estimate their levels can be an important business skill. It can be the basis by which you can successfully make the case for needed training for your employees.

Critical Thinking Questions 1. As you have read, training can increase revenue. The revenue

could come from increased quality of the customer experi- ence due to the impact of training. Consider, as an example, the table of customer survey responses before and after train- ing shown on the next page.

The numbers are percentages of customers in each satisfaction category six months before and six months after employees received their training. A key change is a reduction in the “Very dissatisfied—will never return” category of customers, which fell from 15 to 5 percent. What will this 10-percent change mean to the bottom line?

Customer Satisfaction

Very Dissatisfied— will never

return

Before Training

15 15

15 80

70

5 After

Training

OK, but would return

Satisfied— would return

Assume that the average revenue generated per month by a customer is $500.00. Also assume that you have 500 customers. What is the increased revenue due to the training for the past six months? What would be the revenue generated if you had 1,000 customers?

2. Training can also impact the bottom line by reducing a number of direct costs. For example, employee costs may be reduced because fewer overtime hours will be needed because of improved performance. Another cost reduction can be seen in reduced returns, because training may reduce errors or damage that can occur when the product or service is provided.

Make assumptions about the costs in each of these categories and any other direct costs you can think of. Also assume that you can expect a 10-percent reduction in each of these categories. Generate the direct cost savings estimate due to the training.

3. Training can also impact the bottom line by reducing indirect costs. These are costs that may not be obvious, but that are still important. For example, safety of work processes or equipment can be improved due to training if workers handle materials or equipment more safely. Employee turnover can also be re - duced, because of improved job satisfaction due to the training.

Assume that training results in a 10-percent reduction in your turnover rate. Also, assume that the cost of a turn- over is 1.5 times the departing employee’s salary. For a given average employee salary of your choosing, estimate the reduced costs due to the reduction in turnover.

4. Given your answers to the previous questions, estimate the combined impact of direct and indirect savings generated by training on the bottom line. Extrapolate this number over a one- or two-year time period.

  • Module5a
  • Module5
    • Cover
    • Title Page
    • Copyright Page
    • Contents
    • Preface
    • Acknowledgments
    • About the Authors
    • PART I: Introduction
      • Chapter 1 Meeting Present and Emerging Strategic Human Resource Challenges
        • Human Resource Management: The Challenges
        • Planning and Implementing Strategic HR Policies
        • Selecting HR Strategies to Increase Firm Performance
        • Summary and Conclusions
        • Key Terms
        • Discussion Questions
        • CASE 1.1 EMERGING TRENDS: Managing by the Numbers: A Way to Improve Productivity and Efficiency?
        • CASE 1.2 HR IN SMALL BUSINESS: Zappos: How to Create an Employee Friendly Culture and Use It as a Source of Competitive Advantage
        • CASE 1.3 DISCUSSION: Managers and HR Professional at Sands Corporation: Friends or Foes?
        • CASE 1.4 DISCUSSION: The Enduring Wage Gap by Gender
    • PART II: The Contexts of Human Resource Management
      • Chapter 2 Managing Work Flows and Conducting Job Analysis
        • Work: The Organizational Perspective
        • Work: The Group Perspective
        • Work: The Individual Perspective
        • Designing Jobs and Conducting Job Analysis
        • The Flexible Workforce
        • Human Resource Information Systems
        • Summary and Conclusions
        • Key Terms
        • Discussion Questions
        • CASE 2.1 ETHICS: Job Title Inflation Runs Rampant in Businesses
        • CASE 2.2 EMERGING TRENDS: Work–Life Balance Is the New Perk Employees Are Seeking
        • CASE 2.3 GLOBAL: The Dilemma of Offshore Outsourcing
        • CASE 2.4 CUSTOMER-DRIVEN HR: Writing a Job Description
      • Chapter 3 Understanding Equal Opportunity and the Legal Environment
        • Why Understanding the Legal Environment Is Important
        • Challenges to Legal Compliance
        • Conflicting Strategies for Fair Employment
        • Equal Employment Opportunity Laws
        • EEO Enforcement and Compliance
        • Other Important Laws
        • Avoiding Pitfalls in EEO
        • Summary and Conclusions
        • Key Terms
        • Discussion Questions
        • CASE 3.1 EMERGING TRENDS: Walgreens Leads the Way in Utilizing Workers with Disabilities
        • CASE 3.2 HR IN SMALL BUSINESS: Can an Employee Be Dismissed for Lacking Beauty for the Job?
        • CASE 3.3 DISCUSSION: Are Women Breaking Through the Glass Ceiling?
        • CASE 3.4 ETHICS: Are Employee Noncompete Agreements Legally Enforceable? It Depends
        • Appendix to Chapter 3
        • Human Resource Legislation Discussed in This Text
      • Chapter 4 Managing Diversity
        • What Is Diversity?
        • Challenges in Managing Employee Diversity
        • Diversity in Organizations
        • Improving the Management of Diversity
        • Some Warnings
        • Summary and Conclusions
        • Key Terms
        • Discussion Questions
        • CASE 4.1 DISCUSSION: Why Women Lag Behind in MBA Programs
        • CASE 4.2 ETHICS: Interpreting the Disabilities Act: The Hot Frontier of Diversity Management
        • CASE 4.3 DISCUSSION: Conflict at Northern Sigma
        • CASE 4.4 GLOBAL: Managerial Diversity in the United States by International Firms: A Case of Cultural Misunderstanding?
    • PART III: Staffing
      • Chapter 5 Recruiting and Selecting Employees
        • Human Resource Supply and Demand
        • The Hiring Process
        • Challenges in the Hiring Process
        • Meeting the Challenge of Effective Staffing
        • Selection
        • Legal Issues in Staffing
        • Summary and Conclusions
        • Key Terms
        • Discussion Questions
        • CASE 5.1 CUSTOMER-DRIVEN HR: Women: Keeping the Supply Lines Open
        • CASE 5.2 ETHICS: What a Fraud!
        • CASE 5.3 ETHICS: Put Things in Balance to Keep Employees and Boost Performance
        • CASE 5.4 EMERGING TRENDS: Managing with a Shortage
        • CASE 5.5 HR IN SMALL BUSINESS: One Job, Many Roles
      • Chapter 6 Managing Employee Separations, Downsizing, and Outplacement
        • What Are Employee Separations?
        • Types of Employee Separations
        • Managing Early Retirements
        • Managing Layoffs
        • Outplacement
        • Summary and Conclusions
        • Key Terms
        • Discussion Questions
        • CASE 6.1 GLOBAL: Retraining! Great Concept, but You Have to Execute
        • CASE 6.2 ETHICS: Employment-at-Will: Fair Policy?
        • CASE 6.3 EMERGING TRENDS: From Turnover to Retention: Managing to Keep Your Workers
        • CASE 6.4 ETHICS: Why Me? Procedural Justice in the Layoff Process
    • PART IV: Employee Development
      • Chapter 7 Appraising and Managing Performance
        • What Is Performance Appraisal?
        • Challenges to Effective Performance Measurement
        • Managing Performance
        • Managing the Causes of Problems
        • Summary and Conclusions
        • Key Terms
        • Discussion Questions
        • CASE 7.1 ETHICS: Rank and Yank: Legitimate Performance Improvement Tool or Ruthless and Unethical Management?
        • CASE 7.2 GLOBAL: Cultural Competency
        • CASE 7.3 EMERGING TRENDS: One Job or Multiple Roles?
        • CASE 7.4 CUSTOMER-DRIVEN HR: Electronic Appraisal: Using Performance Review Software
        • CASE 7.5 HR IN SMALL BUSINESS: Let’s Do It Right
        • Appendix: to Chapter 7
        • The Critical-Incident Technique: A Method for Developing a Behaviorally Based Appraisal Instrument
      • Chapter 8 Training the Workforce
        • Key Training Issues
        • Training Versus Development
        • Challenges in Training
        • Managing the Training Process
        • A Special Case: Orientation and Socialization
        • Summary and Conclusions
        • Key Terms
        • Discussion Questions
        • CASE 8.1 HR IN SMALL BUSINESS: Training Employees in a Small Business
        • CASE 8.2 CUSTOMER-DRIVEN HR: Costs and Benefits: Assessing the Business Case for Training
        • CASE 8.3 ETHICS: The Ethics Challenge
        • CASE 8.4 EMERGING TRENDS: Beyond ROI?
      • Chapter 9 Developing Careers
        • What Is Career Development?
        • Challenges in Career Development
        • Meeting the Challenges of Effective Development
        • Self-Development
        • Summary and Conclusions
        • Key Terms
        • Discussion Questions
        • CASE 9.1 CUSTOMER-DRIVEN HR: Be Strategic About Your Career
        • CASE 9.2 HR IN SMALL BUSINESS: Being Big on Development in Small Business
        • CASE 9.3 ETHICS: Anchors II
        • CASE 9.4 GLOBAL: Mentoring as Global Development
        • CASE 9.5 EMERGING TRENDS: Capitalizing on Techno Savvy: Putting Mentoring in Reverse
    • PART V: Compensation
      • Chapter 10 Managing Compensation
        • What Is Compensation?
        • Designing a Compensation System
        • Job Versus Individual Pay
        • Compensation Tools
        • The Legal Environment and Pay System Governance
        • Summary and Conclusions
        • Key Terms
        • Discussion Questions
        • CASE 10.1 DISCUSSION: Money Doesn’t Buy Happiness. Well, on Second Thought . . .
        • CASE 10.2 HR IN SMALL BUSINESS: David Versus Goliath: Compensation in Small Versus Large Firms
        • CASE 10.3 DISCUSSION: An Academic Question
        • CASE 10.4 EMERGING TRENDS: More Suits for Overtime Pay
        • CASE 10.5 EMERGING TRENDS: A Challenge at Antle Corporation
      • Chapter 11 Rewarding Performance
        • Pay for Performance: The Challenges
        • Meeting the Challenges of Pay-for-Performance Systems
        • Types of Pay-for-Performance Plans
        • Designing Pay-for-Performance Plans for Executives and Salespeople
        • Summary and Conclusions
        • Key Terms
        • Discussion Questions
        • CASE 11.1 EMERGING TRENDS: When Schools Offer Money as a Motivator
        • CASE 11.2 DISCUSSION: Loafers at Lakeside Utility Company
        • CASE 11.3 HR IN SMALL BUSINESS: How Should Incentive Money Be Distributed?
        • CASE 11.4 ETHICS: The Pitfalls of Merit Pay and Pay for Performance
      • Chapter 12 Designing and Administering Benefits
        • An Overview of Benefits
        • The Benefits Strategy
        • Legally Required Benefits
        • Voluntary Benefits
        • Administering Benefits
        • Summary and Conclusions
        • Key Terms
        • Discussion Questions
        • CASE 12.1 EMERGING TRENDS: Employees Are Paying Increasingly Larger Shares of Their Health Care Benefit Costs
        • CASE 12.2 ETHICS: Should Employers Penalize Employees Who Do Not Adopt Healthy Habits?
        • CASE 12.3 ETHICS: Google’s On-Site Child-Care Policy Stirs up a Controversy
        • CASE 12.4 CUSTOMER-DRIVEN HR: IBM’s 401(k) Plan Sets the Standard
    • PART VI: Governance
      • Chapter 13 Developing Employee Relations
        • The Roles of the Manager and the Employee Relations Specialist
        • Developing Employee Communications
        • Encourage Effective Communications
        • Employee Recognition Programs
        • Summary and Conclusions
        • Key Terms
        • Discussion Questions
        • CASE 13.1 HR IN SMALL BUSINESS: Treating Employees Like Family Is Good for Business
        • CASE 13.2 ETHICS: Should Having Fun Be a Job Requirement?
        • CASE 13.3 EMERGING TRENDS: Going Green Keeps New Belgium Brewing Company in the Black
        • CASE 13.4 GLOBAL: In Praise of Nepotism?
      • Chapter 14 Respecting Employee Rights and Managing Discipline
        • Employee Rights
        • Management Rights
        • Employee Rights Challenges: A Balancing Act
        • Disciplining Employees
        • Administering and Managing Discipline
        • Managing Difficult Employees
        • Preventing the Need for Discipline with Human Resource Management
        • Summary and Conclusions
        • Key Terms
        • Discussion Questions
        • CASE 14.1 HR IN SMALL BUSINESS: Should Employees Be Disciplined for “Stealing Time”?
        • CASE 14.2 ETHICS: Background Checks Can Misfire, Harming Employees’ Career Prospects
        • CASE 14.3 ETHICS: Employees Should Be Aware of the Risks Before They Attempt to Blow the Whistle
        • CASE 14.4 GLOBAL: Illegal Immigrants in the Workforce: Opportunity or Challenge?
      • Chapter 15 Working with Organized Labor
        • Why do Employees Join Unions?
        • Labor Relations and the Legal Environment
        • Labor Relations in the United States
        • Labor Relations in Other Countries
        • Labor Relations Strategy
        • Managing the Labor Relations Process
        • The Impact of Unions on Human Resource Management
        • Summary and Conclusions
        • Key Terms
        • Discussion Questions
        • CASE 15.1 EMERGING TRENDS: The Freelancers Union: A New Approach to Unionism?
        • CASE 15.2 CUSTOMER-DRIVEN HR: A Lengthy Screenwriters’ Strike Forces Television Networks to Broadcast Reruns
        • CASE 15.3 CUSTOMER-DRIVEN HR: When Is a Team a Union?
        • CASE 15.4 ETHICS: Union Members Protest a 50 Percent Wage Cut at a General Motors Plant
      • Chapter 16 Managing Workplace Safety and Health
        • Workplace Safety and the Law
        • Managing Contemporary Safety, Health, and Behavioral Issues
        • Safety and Health Programs
        • Summary and Conclusions
        • Key Terms
        • Discussion Questions
        • CASE 16.1 ETHICS: Standing Up to Workplace Bullies
        • CASE 16.2 EMERGING TRENDS: On the Tip of a Beryllium Iceberg?
        • CASE 16.3 GLOBAL: Mental Health: A Global Concern
        • CASE 16.4 HR IN SMALL BUSINESS: Safety and Health in the Small-Business Environment
      • Chapter 17 International HRM Challenge
        • The Stages of International Involvement
        • Determining the Mix of Host-Country and Expatriate Employees
        • The Challenges of Expatriate Assignments
        • Effectively Managing Expatriate Assignments with HRM Policies and Practices
        • Developing HRM Policies in a Global Context
        • Human Resources Management and Exporting Firms
        • Summary and Conclusions
        • Key Terms
        • Discussion Questions
        • CASE 17.1 GLOBAL: American Universities Moving Overseas
        • CASE 17.2 HR IN SMALL BUSINESS: Rural Outsourcing: How Small U.S. Businesses May Keep Large Firms from Going Overseas to Subcontract Work
        • CASE 17.3 DISCUSSION: Two Sides to Every Story
        • CASE 17.4 ETHICS: When in Rome Do as the Romans Do? The Case of Foreign Bribes
        • CASE 17.5 DISCUSSION: Are Culture-Specific HR Polices a Good Idea?
    • Appendix
    • Concise Dictionary of HR Terminology
    • Company, Name, and Product Index
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    • Subject Index
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